Ras G And The Afrikan Space Program Rar Do Pobrania

Ras G And The Afrikan Space Program Rar Do Pobrania Average ratng: 3,5/5 4574reviews

Ras G & The Afrikan Space Program – Other Worlds. Cg 8520 Karaokes Manual Treadmill. Limited tapes available here: Ras_G & The Afrikan Space Program Los Angeles, California. West Coast psyche-hop head Ras G trips his astral ambitions on a properly abstract vector with the 'Destnation There' EP. Much like his Brainfeeder mixtape.

Space Program 1960s

Ras G & The Afrikan Space Program – Back On The Planet Brainfeeder: 2013 Lacking any element of melody, unconventional producer ’s newest offering kicks off with a beat that instead relies on a quickening pace, reaching a crescendo during its closing moments. Cymbal clashes and loud clanks reminiscent of pots and pans smashing together mesh with a thunderous drum roll and twinkling, mechanical shimmers. The explosive beginning track is as beastly as it is unpleasant as if Ras wanted to prove that he could create sounds which evoke the imagery of a hard-hitting hurricane, or a warped crash. With a title like Back On The Planet, the latter option just might be a little more likely.

Ras G And The Afrikan Space Program Rar Do Pobrania

The Afrikan Space Program becomes clearer in focus and more tolerable musically on the following two records, “All Is Well” and “CosMc Lounge Kisses” (in which Ras crafts an eerily entertaining electronic instrumentation of what seems to be giggling), only to be continued by the beginning moments of “Along The Way”. Not a fully developed song but rather an artistic attempt at composition, “Along The Way” first consists of a gradual buildup; a slow-churning, dark instrumental integration that conjures a moving shot of an ominous ship drifting through an abundance of black nothingness before a change occurs. Just over a minute into the aforementioned fourth track, an overly repetitive, off-key, messy bridge is introduced. With each passing second of this new inclusion, Back On The Planet regresses back to its ambitious but ineffective introduction. One can only imagine that a ride aboard a spaceship would mean encountering a fair share of intergalactic potholes, asteroids, and God knows what else, all of which making for a rather bumpy ride. During the Afrikan Space Program’s exploratory periods, head captain Ras G leads himself through the borderless, hazy, futuristic zones once occupied by his influencer Sun Ra, a jazz composer (among other titles) who never met a boundary he was afraid of testing.